For Jacksonville residents — Duval County, the Beaches, San Marco, Riverside, Mandarin, Orange Park, St. Augustine, Fernandina — licensed Florida telehealth for UTIs, BV, yeast, ED, hair loss, and chronic medication bridge refills. $45 flat, same-day e-prescriptions to any Jacksonville-area pharmacy. No insurance, no subscription, no driving across the largest-by-area city in the lower 48.
Same $45 flat fee for every visit. Pick the intake that matches your situation.
The largest-by-area city in the continental U.S. Jacksonville's consolidated city-county government covers roughly 874 square miles — more than Los Angeles, Dallas, and San Francisco combined. That matters for pharmacy access. Downtown, San Marco, Riverside/Avondale, the Southside, and the Beaches have dense chain coverage (Walgreens, CVS, Publix), but the Westside, Northside, Arlington periphery, and the far reaches of Mandarin or Oceanway require more driving between options. Telehealth removes the driving math: you pick any Jacksonville pharmacy, we route the prescription, and you go once rather than twice (once for urgent care, once for pickup).
Four-county First Coast service area. Jacksonville's functional metro extends well past Duval's borders. We treat residents of St. Johns County (St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra Beach, Nocatee), Nassau County (Fernandina Beach, Yulee, Amelia Island), and Clay County (Orange Park, Middleburg, Fleming Island, Green Cove Springs) with the same $45 fee and same licensing. If you live in Nocatee but work in Jacksonville, pick whichever pharmacy is on your daily route — we route e-prescriptions identically to either.
NAS Jacksonville, NS Mayport, and military families. Jacksonville hosts Naval Air Station Jacksonville (NAS Jax) and Naval Station Mayport — two major Navy installations supporting a large military community. Active-duty service members typically receive primary care through Naval Hospital Jacksonville or TRICARE network providers. We are not TRICARE-credentialed, so the $45 visit fee is out-of-pocket with no reimbursement path. Many military spouses, retirees, and dependents use us as a cash-pay alternative when TRICARE wait times stretch beyond what an acute UTI or yeast infection can tolerate. Naval Hospital Jacksonville's pharmacy serves TRICARE patients only — we route to Navy Exchange pharmacies, the base CVS or Walgreens, or any off-base chain you prefer.
Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, Baptist, and UF Health. Jacksonville's hospital landscape is dominated by three systems: Mayo Clinic Jacksonville (on San Pablo Road near the Intracoastal, a national-reputation specialty referral center), Baptist Health (the largest local system with Baptist Jacksonville downtown, Baptist South on Old St. Augustine Road, Baptist Beaches in Jacksonville Beach, Baptist Nassau in Fernandina, and Wolfson Children's), and UF Health Jacksonville (the academic safety-net hospital on 8th Street downtown, plus UF Health North in the Northside). Our scope is outpatient uncomplicated care — none of those systems is directly relevant to our $45 telehealth visits, but they're the right destinations for anything beyond that. We refer without charge if our intake identifies red flags.
The Beaches — Atlantic, Neptune, Jacksonville Beach. The three Beaches cities east of the Intracoastal have their own pharmacy ecosystem: the Publix on Beach Boulevard serves both Atlantic and Neptune Beach, CVS and Walgreens have locations at each Beaches town center, and Baptist Beaches operates the Beaches' primary emergency department. If you live at the Beaches, you don't need to cross any bridge to fill — your entire care loop can happen east of the Intracoastal.
We e-prescribe to any licensed Florida pharmacy. What Jacksonville patients use most:
If your case is out of scope for async telehealth, you're refunded automatically and referred to the right in-person destination.
For conditions beyond our telehealth scope — fever with UTI symptoms, suspected kidney infection, pregnancy complications, chest pain, injury, complex chronic care — Jacksonville has strong in-person options:
For walk-in urgent care (UTI with fever, respiratory infection, injury), Baptist Express Care, CareSpot, and MD Now have locations across Duval and the peripheral counties. Typical out-of-pocket $150–250.
Yes — all of Duval (Jacksonville proper, Beaches, Mayport), plus St. Johns (St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra), Nassau (Fernandina, Yulee), and Clay (Orange Park, Fleming Island) counties. Same $45 fee statewide.
Nearly all licensed Florida pharmacies accept e-prescriptions today. Pharmacy density is uneven across Duval's 874 square miles — dense downtown, Beaches, and Southside; thinner Westside, Northside, and Arlington periphery. Pick a pharmacy on your routine route rather than the closest one.
Mayo Clinic's retail pharmacy serves established Mayo patients primarily and may not accept outside e-prescriptions. Chain pharmacies near Mayo's San Pablo campus (CVS, Walgreens, Publix) are a cleaner choice for Bidwell Health prescriptions.
Active-duty should use Naval Hospital Jacksonville or TRICARE network providers. Retirees, spouses, and dependents can use us as a cash-pay option when TRICARE wait times are long. We are not TRICARE-credentialed — $45 is out-of-pocket and not reimbursable.
Identical. Atlantic, Neptune, and Jacksonville Beach residents fill at the Beaches Publix, CVS, Walgreens, or Baptist Beaches outpatient pharmacy. No Intracoastal crossing required — your whole care loop can happen east of the bridge.
Not for episodic needs. If you have an ongoing UF Health care plan for a chronic condition, your UF primary care team handles that. For quick, outside-the-plan needs (UTI, yeast, a bridge refill while waiting for an appointment), our telehealth works in parallel — send a record to your UF MyChart for continuity.